Pirate Bay trial closes, verdict in 45 days

The prosecution, representing the IFPI and major content studios, finished up yesterday. They seek 117 million SEK ($12.7 million, €10.1 million) in damages and up to one year imprisonment of Pirate Bay's founders for making infringing content available.

The defense made its closing remarks today, which included a presentation from Pirate Bay founder Karl Lundstrom's lawyer Per Samuelsson. Samuelsson said, "The Pirate Bay is one of thousands of services that all look the same. There is a legal use of the service area. You can use it to find perfectly legal torrent files, with full legal coverage. You can also use the service for illegal means. The service is blind."

Samuelsson also brought up the politicized nature of the trial, due to the support from the political Pirate Party, but suggested that the only one to wield the political scepter was the prosecution.

"There is a dimension which played a large role but should not be there. The target is strongly politically charged, so be it. It is obvious that politics and law do not belong together...It's a subconscious risk to believe this is some great political trial. It falls upon you as a judge to look in the mirror and ask if 'Have I been influenced by this political charge?"

The trial's political undercurrent has indeed been powerful. Rick Falkvinge of Sweden's Pirate Party this afternoon said, "The distance between the current law and general legal consciousness can be seen even in hard figures. The Pirate Party has accepted more than 2000 new members since the trial began February 16, and now has more members than both the Green Party and Leftist Party. The [copyright] lobby has certainly worked hard on politicians, but it is more and more painfully obvious that today's copyright lacks popular support."

Falkvinge concluded, "We have a revolution right now, before our very eyes, to bring greater culture and knowledge to the public than libraries ever could...it is right to share knowledge, thoughts, ideas and our common culture, which moves us as a society forward."

The District Court's decision on the Pirate Bay trial will be made on April 17.